Texas State Highway 82 Explained

State:TX
Type:SH
Route:82
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:SH 82 highlighted in red
Length Mi:13.009
Length Round:3
Established:January 29, 1975
Direction A:South
Direction B:North
Terminus B: in Port Arthur
Previous Type:US
Previous Route:82
Next Type:US
Next Route:83

State Highway 82 (SH 82) is a 13.009miles state highway in Jefferson County, Texas, United States, that connects Louisiana Highway 82 (LA 82) at the Louisiana state line (on the Causeway Bridge over the Sabine River) with Texas State Highway 72 (SH 72) in Port Arthur. A roadway existed from at least 1970, when the Gulfgate Bridge (later renamed Martin Luther King Bridge) was completed;[1] the route was designated SH 82 in 1975. The designation had previously applied to a route in West Texas, from 1923 to 1958.

History

Pecos, Ward, and Winkler counties

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SH 82 was originally designated on August 21, 1923, on a route from the West Texas town of Monahans south to Fort Stockton, with a planned extension south to Sanderson, replacing part of SH 17.[2] On October 16, 1928, SH 82 was extended north to Kermit.[3] On June 25, 1929, SH 82 was extended north to the New Mexico state line.[4] The planned extension to Sanderson was transferred to newly designated U.S. Highway 285 (cosigned since 1935) on September 26, 1939. On February 27, 1958, the remainder of the route was renumbered as SH 18, to coordinate with its intersection with New Mexico State Road 18.

Jefferson County

On January 29, 1975, SH 82 was designated over its current route in Jefferson County from SH 87 to Louisiana Highway 82. On January 7, 1987, the route was extended 2.1miles to SH 73 incorporating the former Spur 214. The section west of Sabine Pass was previously proposed on September 19, 1956, as SH 362 (for access to the proposed levee; to be cancelled when construction was completed), but the designation was changed to FM 1900 on December 13, 1956 (still was to be cancelled when construction was completed), and FM 1900 was completed, and FM 1900 was cancelled on October 30, 1958, due to completion of construction.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Gulfgate Bridge AKA Martin Luther King Bridge . texasescapes.com . May 31, 2003 . September 13, 2020.
  2. Web site: Minutes of the Seventy-Third and First Adjourned Meeting of the State Highway Commission . August 21, 1923 . publicdocs.txdot.gov . October 26, 2017.
  3. Web site: Minutes of the One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Meeting of the State Highway Commission . October 15, 1928 . publicdocs.txdot.gov . December 6, 2018.
  4. Web site: Minutes of the One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Meeting of the State Highway Commission . June 25, 1929 . publicdocs.txdot.gov . January 25, 2018.